Hugh Dubberly and Shelley Evenson provided a helpful framework for looking at customer experience in 2008, when they released their Experience Cycle model.

In this framework, a customer’s interaction with a product or service is broken down into five phases: Connect & Attract, Orient, Transact, Extend & Retain and Advocate.

You probably spend a great deal of time on connecting with consumers and attracting them, and also on the Transact, Extend & Retain and Advocate phases.

How to ‘orient’ insurance consumers

Too often, “Orient” is the missing piece.

To write profitable insurance, an insurance company often needs to spend time to get and review information about the consumer. The consumer needs to understand why the insurance company needs this information, and how to get the information efficiently.

Insurance companies often expect consumers to go right from the Connect & Attract phase to the Transact phase, without going through the Orient stage. The consumer gets turned off by all of the unexpected requests for information, and may even bail out.

This can happen online, and it can also happen in a face-to-face sales environment.

So, in what ways might we fill in the missing piece?

Questions that must be answered

First, we must understand what questions must be answered to get the consumer oriented. These questions include:

Do I really need insurance?

If so, what kind?

How much do I need?

How are my costs determined? How much will it cost?

What does the process look like?

How much time and information do I really need to give?

How will you use my data? Will it be used against me now or down the road?

Next, we can take pages out of the lesson books from companies in other industry categories:

Here are three examples:

1. Credit Karma
Here’s a service that not only aggregates your various credit reports but also breaks your score down into key behaviors. The breakdown helps users understand how to improve their credit scores, and how credit scores are is used by credit card companies

2. Domino’s Pizza
When you’re hungry, the tension of not knowing what’s happening with your order, or when it will arrive, can be maddening. Domino’s responded by creating the “where’s my pizza” function. The consumer can see exactly when the pizza is being made, when the pizza is in the oven, and when the pizza is in the car and on the way. For users, knowing in advance that they will have visibility into the process is comforting.

3. RealAge Test
This system, used by millions of people, engages the user in a series of questions and instantly delivers a “real age,” based on health and risk factors. Your calendar age might be 40, but your “real age” could be 38. The test is a socially engaging way to help orient people around the behaviors that lead to longevity and health, while also helping them understand risk factors.

Those are examples of elaborate digital experiences, but you can also provide orientation with mechanisms such as simple FAQs, videos and chat tools.